Old Pound Coins

2021年11月18日
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Leftover Currency’s online exchange service for old £1 pound coins is available to everyone, no matter if you live in the UK or not. It is possible to send your old one pound coins from overseas and receive payment by bank transfer or PayPal in the currency of your choice. Exchange old style £1 pound coins to cash. One Full Pound of Coins (that’s over 100 coins on average) About Half by weight will be United States Coins and Half World Coins The U.S. Coins all date prior to 1970 some dating back over 100-years old All Lots will contain at least several Silver Coins $$$ EXTRA! “Valuable Bonus Coins” Read All About It! The Old English pound was a unit of weight, initially equated with the Ancient Roman weight called libra, which explains why the monetary sign in English is still ‘£’, the letter ‘L’ as the initial of libra. We exchange both British Pound coins and banknotes, and we also accept withdrawn Pound Sterling banknotes. It’s time to crack open your piggy bank and look down the back of your sofa - because you could be hoarding some rare £1 coins. The old circular £1 coin became void in October 2017.
*Rare Old Pound Coins
*Old Pound Coins Out Of Circulation
*Old 5 Pound Note
*Old Pound Coins Ebay
*Old Pound Coins Nationwide
*Old Pound Coins Value
*One Pound CoinThere are an estimated 122 million old pound coins unaccounted for – and some could be worth a few quid more than face value. Keep your eye out for one of these rare and valuable ’round pound’ coins.Rare Old Pound Coins
They may have stopped being legal tender back in 2017, but there is still a mind-boggling number of old pound coins unaccounted for.
According to the Royal Mint, some 122 million ’round pounds’ have yet to find their way back to the mint, or be deposited at a local bank.
Given they obviously aren’t making any more of them, it’s possible there are a few collector’s items sat down the back of sofas or in forgotten piggy banks.
So which ones should you be on the lookout for?Rarest old pound coins
According to coin collection specialists Change Checker, the 2011 Edinburgh £1 (pictured below) tops the list.
The site ranks coins on a score from one to 100: the higher the rating, the more valuable the coin is likely to be.
And the Edinbuirgh coin is the only one to score the full 100.

We’ve pasted the full list of Change Checker’s rarest old £1 coins below so you can see if any of your old change beats face value.
In the likelihood that your coin (or coins) are nothing special, it is still worth exchanging them at your bank on your next trip (most but not all branches will accept them).
It’s still money, after all! How much are these coins worth?
Before we get to actual values, there are two key points to discuss first, starting with the fact that we aren’t talking about life-changing sums here.
Those headlines you read about coins and notes selling for £1,000s only happen when it’s genuinely unique; a one-of-a-kind.
They’ve often been out of circulation for decades or have a misprint on them that makes them so valuable to professional collectors.
The truth is that you’re highly, highly unlikely to have a very valuable coin in your house, car or wherever you keep change.Watch out for chancers
The second issue to raise is that of misinformation about values, which is hardly helped by numerous articles talking about coins being on sale with a massive price tag on sites like eBay and the like.
There’s a very big difference between someone trying to sell a coin for a huge sum and another person actually paying that price. We wrote about the problem in detail in this piece: ’Rare and valuable coins are expensive for a reason’.
A lot of high-value listings are simply from people chancing their arm or are themselves misinformed, so it’s up to you to do your research before selling or buying any rare coins or notes.
Most coins are worth the value that’s printed on them.
Right, now that we’ve covered the fine print, what might you get for that 2011 Edinburgh £1 coin you’ve just discovered under your sofa?
At the time of publishing, the highest listed sale price on eBay is just over £30. But as we’ve just covered that’s no indication of actual value. Instead, we’ve checked the confirmed sale prices and a coin fitting that description recently sold for just under £9.
So there you go. Maybe enough for a meal for two if you wait for the Eat Out to Help Out scheme to kick off next week.. Temple nile casino erfahrungen.Change Checker £1 Scarcity Index
The old one pound coin went out of circulation on 15 October 2017. This has all happened rather suddenly, hasn’t it? It feels like the shiny new one pound coins only came out the other week. However if you have found an old one pound coin lurking in your money box or down the back of the sofa, STOP RIGHT THERE, BUSTER. There are still a number of ways in which you can spend an old one pound coin – and they are all listed below.
Before you continue: do note that at the time of writing, certain shops and supermarkets will still accept your old one pound coin. I haven’t included this list in the bigger list below, because the amnesty for the old one pound coin is of an extremely limited duration. However here is what you need to know:
Tesco – accepting the old one pound coin until 23 October 2017.
Aldi – accepting the old one pound coin until 30 October 2017.Old Pound Coins Out Of Circulation
Iceland – accepting the old one pound coin until 31 October 2017.
Poundland – accepting the old one pound coin until 31 October 2017.
Small shops – it’s worth asking!
Here are five other ways to spend your old pound coins:Old 5 Pound Note1. You can use your old pound coin in supermarket trolleys. Old Pound Coins Ebay
Certain supermarkets have not upgraded their trolleys, so the round pound coins will still work. Earlier this month, Sainsburys and Tesco both admitted they hadn’t yet modified their trolleys to take the new pound coins, blaming ‘internal logistical problems.’2. You can donate your old pound coin to the Poppy Appeal.
The Royal British Legion is accepting old one pound coins as donations to its 2017 Poppy Appeal, which runs until 12 November 2017.
Claire Rowcliffe, director of fundraising for the Royal British Legion, has said: “We’d be delighted to turn your out-of-date pounds into poppies, commemorating the fallen while enabling us to offer vital assistance to all members of the Armed Forces community, young and old.”3. You can donate your old pound coin to Pudsey’s Round Pound Countdown.
Another charity that would be grateful for your old one pound coins in 2017 is Children in Need. It’s called Pudsey’s Round Pound Countdown.
You can no longer spend your old pounds, but we can still collect them and put them to work changing young lives here in the UK.
Millions of round pound coins are still in circulation. We’re challenging the nation to hunt for them in saving jars, piggy banks, coat pockets and down the back of sofas, then put them to good use by donating to BBC Children in Need!
We’re aiming to collect as many as we can before our big Appeal Day on 17th November.
More details here.4. You can add your old pound coin to your bank, building society or Post Office savings.
It turns out that a lot of high street banks will still accept old one pound coins as deposits into bank accounts. The amount of time for which you’ll be able to do this, however, varies from bank to bank.
According to the Royal Mint, the following banks are still accepting old one pound coins:
*RBS
*NatWest
*Ulster
*HSBC
*Barclays
*Lloyds
*Santander
*Nationwide
*Clydesdale
*Yorkshire Bank
*Halifax
*Bank of Scotland
If you are self-employed: it is worth noting that this policy applies to business accounts as well as personal accounts, but you have to separate the old pound coins from the new ones when you are making a cash deposit.
Also – and unsurprisingly – this offer tends to be open to current customers only. If you are not a customer and you walk through the door waving a bag of old one pound coins and asking to change them up, you will likely be told to get lost.
Lloyds Banking Group, which includes Lloyds, Bank of Scotland and Halifax, has said that in addition to accepting old one pound coins as deposits, it will also change old one pound coins for new one pound coins. Again, this offer is available to their current customers only. No deadline for the expiry of this offer has yet been set.
The list above may not be exhaustive, so if your financial institution of choice isn’t featured, it is worth checking with your bank or building society to see what the deal is. I’d also like to point out that at a lot of the banks listed there, you can open a savings account with as little as £1. So what are you waiting for?5. You can check to see if your old pound coin is worth any (well, more) money.
If you are the owner of a rare one pound coin, you can flog it on eBay, sell it on another specialist site or sell it to a dealer – and make a tidy profit.
There is a terrific website called Change Checker, which focuses on the UK coin inventory and collectors’ market. The first thing you should do is take a look at the year engraved on your old one pound coin, and cross-reference it with this diagram:
As you can see, the rarest one pound coin we have is the 2011 Edinburgh design. This was part of the series depicting the UK’s capital cities. The 2011 Edinburgh one pound is the only one coin with a mintage of less than a million. Change Checker compares it to the 1983 Royal Arms shield one pound coin: more than 443 million of those were minted. At the time of writing, 2011 Edinburgh pounds in excellent condition are selling on eBay for up to £95 each.
The next rarest one pound coins are the 2011 Cardiff pound coin and the 2010 London pound coin (selling on eBay for up to £68).
Coin Checker notes:
Another coin to look out for is The Royal Arms £1. Although this is a common design which is regularly ignored, make sure to look out for one with a 2008 date – that’s actually the fourth rarest £1 coin.
At the time of writing, 2008 Royal Arms pound coins in excellent condition are selling on eBay for up to £57 each.
If you have one of these coins and it isn’t in mint or excellent condition, it could still sell on eBay for around £5 – which, let’s face it, is still a handsome profit after eBay fees are paid.
The next rarest one pound coins are the 2014 Thistle, 2013 Daffodil, 2013 Rose and 2014 Flax. The selling values for these seem to range from £1.50 to £15, with much depending on the condition of the coin.Old Pound Coins NationwideFinally…
If you have read all the way to the bottom and you haven’t found an old pound coin yet, your time is likely to come. Earlier this year, the government estimated there were more than 433 million old pound coins in circulation. Chances are that squirrelled away somewhere, you have one, or two, or three, or four…Old Pound Coins Value
I’d gently suggest that if you have found an old one pound coin, the best time to spend it, save it, donate it or cash it in is now. While deadlines have yet to be set for trolleys and bank amnesties, they aren’t going to be around forever. We don’t yet know if charities will be asking for old one pound coins in years to come. Coin values change over time – but they can go down as well as up. I don’t usually say this, but… spend spend spend!One Pound Coin
Image credits: William Warby & TaxRebate.org.uk (CC by 2.0.); Change Checker/288 Group Ltd.
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